Coda offers multiple pricing tiers ranging from a free plan to enterprise options. This guide breaks down every plan, what’s included, and which one offers the best value for your needs.
Coda’s pricing is more complex than most tools in this category — and more expensive than it first appears. Here’s exactly what each plan includes, what triggers an upgrade, and whether the price is justified.
Coda Plans and Pricing in 2026
| Plan | Price | Billed As | Right For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free | $0/user | — | Solo use, evaluation |
| Pro | $10/user/month | Annually | Power users and small teams |
| Team | $30/user/month | Annually | Teams needing Packs and AI |
| Enterprise | Custom | Custom | Large org security/compliance |
Monthly billing adds ~20% over annual pricing. All user-based plans require payment per editor (viewers are free).
Free Plan: What You Can Actually Build
The free plan is more generous than most competitors on paper — unlimited docs, unlimited editors — but the “object” limit is the hidden constraint.
Free includes:
- Unlimited docs
- Unlimited editors
- Up to 1,000 objects per doc (rows, columns, buttons, formulas)
- Basic automations (limited runs/month)
- Core table functionality
Not in Free:
- Pack integrations (Jira, Gmail, GitHub, etc.)
- Cross-doc functionality
- Custom branding or domains
- Advanced automations
- Coda AI
- Priority support
For personal use or evaluating Coda’s capabilities, the free plan works. For any operational workflow with real data, you’ll hit the object limit before you finish building.
Pro Plan ($10/user/month)
The Pro plan removes the object cap and adds the features that make Coda worth using:
Added in Pro:
- Unlimited objects per doc
- Unlimited automation runs
- Custom branding for published docs
- Offline mode
- Priority support
At $10/user/month (billed annually), Pro is the entry point for serious Coda use. It’s comparable to Notion Plus pricing, which makes it easier to justify over Notion if you need Coda’s formula and automation capabilities.
Who should be on Pro: Solo power users, small teams building internal trackers, anyone who hit the free object limit.
Team Plan ($30/user/month)
This is where Coda gets expensive — and where it delivers the most unique value:
Added in Team:
- Packs — Live integrations with Gmail, Jira, GitHub, Figma, Salesforce, and 600+ others. Pull real data into your docs.
- Coda AI — Summarization, formula assistance, table generation from prompts
- Admin controls — User management, permission controls
- Doc locking — Prevent edits while reviewing
- Cross-workspace Packs — Share Packs across multiple docs/teams
The Pack integrations are the core reason to pay for Team. A Jira Pack that pulls in your open issues, a Gmail Pack that lets a button send an email from the doc — this functionality replaces Zapier workflows for many operational processes.
At $30/user/month, Team is expensive compared to alternatives:
- Notion Business: $15/user/month
- Airtable Business: $45/user/month
- ClickUp Business: $12/user/month
Whether it’s worth $30 depends entirely on whether you need the Packs. For teams replacing Zapier middleware with Coda-native integrations, the math can work out. For teams using Coda primarily for documents and tables, Pro at $10 is sufficient.
How Coda Pricing Compares
| Tool | Entry Paid Plan | Full-featured Plan |
|---|---|---|
| Coda | $10/user/month (Pro) | $30/user/month (Team) |
| Notion | $10/user/month (Plus) | $15/user/month (Business) |
| Airtable | $20/seat/month (Team) | $45/seat/month (Business) |
| ClickUp | $7/user/month (Unlimited) | $12/user/month (Business) |
Coda sits between Notion and Airtable in price. It’s more expensive than Notion at the team level, cheaper than Airtable. Whether Coda’s formula power and document integration justify the premium over Notion depends on your workflow.
→ Notion vs Coda Full Comparison
The Hidden Cost: Viewer Seats Are Free, But Packs Per User Add Up
One cost advantage Coda has over many competitors: viewers are free. In Airtable, everyone who accesses a base counts as a seat. In Coda, only editors pay. If you’re building an internal tool that 50 people read but only 5 people edit, you pay for 5.
That said, Pack-heavy workflows on the Team plan can add up quickly. A 10-person team on Team pays $300/month. For that price, you could run Notion Business ($150/month) plus a Zapier Professional plan ($120/month) and get comparable functionality with a more familiar tool.
Is Coda Worth the Price?
Free → Pro is almost always worth it ($10/user/month). If you’re using Coda seriously, the object limit is the only real constraint and Pro removes it cleanly.
Pro → Team is worth it if you need live Pack integrations or Coda AI. If you’re not using Packs, stay on Pro.
Team vs switching to Notion + Zapier: Do the math. A small team that’s deeply invested in Coda’s doc-first workflow will find $30/user/month justified. Teams evaluating from scratch should compare Notion Business at $15 seriously before committing.
Related: Coda Review 2026: Full Breakdown | Notion vs Coda: Which Is Better? | Best Notion Alternatives in 2026
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Coda free?
Yes, Coda offers a free plan with limited features. See the pricing breakdown above for what’s included in each tier.
Is Coda worth paying for?
It depends on your needs. The free plan works for basic use, but teams and power users will benefit from paid features. See our plan-by-plan analysis above.
What is the cheapest Coda plan?
Check the pricing table above for the most current pricing. Plans and pricing may change — we update this page regularly.